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Circle: The Real Breakout Moment for Crypto Comes From Payments, Not Price Games - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
Crypto’s next breakout may not come from a price chart at all, and Circle’s framing points at payments as the real turning point. Kash Razzaghi, chief commercial officer of Circle, argued that the industry’s next chapter will be defined by utility rather than speculation. In his view, the conversation is shifting toward infrastructure that can improve money movement, store value more effectively and expand access to financial systems and tools. That matters because it recasts crypto not as a market story first, but as a financial-rail story whose importance depends on solving friction.
Payments, not price action, are becoming the real test
That shift became clearer when Razzaghi described blockchain and digital assets as tools for solving real-world problems, not vehicles for price games. Recounting discussions around the World Economic Forum in Davos, he said the focus was on how the technology can enhance money movement, support stores of value and widen access to financial tools. He also argued that clearer regulations are helping open the door for institutions just as the practical advantages of the infrastructure become easier to recognize. The implication is blunt: crypto adoption will deepen when usefulness becomes easier to measure than excitement.

The argument is landing alongside a broader attempt to connect crypto infrastructure with traditional payment rails at institutional scale. Mastercard this week revisited an earlier exchange with Razzaghi and is now pursuing an initiative involving more than 85 partners, including Circle, crypto exchanges, blockchain developers, fintech companies and banks. The project is designed to explore how blockchain-based systems might connect more directly with existing payment networks. That context strengthens Circle’s message. If crypto’s next phase is really about moving massive sums instantly, then integration with established rails becomes part of the thesis itself as well.
That is why Circle’s breakout thesis is less about speculative upside and more about financial plumbing finally becoming usable at scale. Razzaghi’s point is not that price stops mattering, but that price alone no longer explains where the sector is headed. The more durable opportunity, he suggests, lies in infrastructure that institutions can trust, regulators can understand and large payment networks can use. In that framing, crypto’s milestone is not a trading frenzy. It is the moment blockchain becomes enough to move billions or trillions of dollars without needing speculation to explain its importance.